The animated film that started it all. Produced by Walt Disney Feature
Animation in Burbank, California, this unassuming stop-gap project grew to
become a mythic phenomenon, setting record numbers for box-office sales
and merchandising revenue around the world, and inspiring thousands of
fans to build on its story with their own creativity.

Image Archive
Hundreds of high-quality screen images, clip art, and more!Sounds & Music
Dialogue clips, MIDI songs, and CD track information.Texts & Fan-Fiction
Essays, reviews, production notes, and hundreds of fan stories.Video Clips
Video files of memorable scenes, and many more interesting movie files.Character Profiles
Pictures and descriptions of all the Lion King characters and their roles in the story.

Image ArchiveHundreds of high-quality screen images, clip art, and more!Sounds & MusicDialogue clips, MIDI songs, and CD track information.Texts & Fan-FictionEssays, reviews, production notes, and hundreds of fan stories.Video ClipsVideo files of memorable scenes, and many more interesting movie files.Character ProfilesPictures and descriptions of all the Lion King characters and their roles in the story.

The long-awaited sequel. A direct-to-video production by Walt Disney Television
Animation, Simba's Pride adds new characters and another chapter to
the Circle of Life mythos begun in the original theatrical film.

The Lion King 1½ (2004)

The Circle of Life begins anew with a fresh, satiric retelling of the
original film's story, from the comic perspective of the meerkat Timon and
the warthog Pumbaa. A tribute to the grandeur of the original as much as
it is a satire, this direct-to-video production (from Walt Disney TV Animation
Australia) appeals to wistful nostalgia as much as to our funny bones.

The Lion King: The Broadway Musical

Premiering in Minneapolis in 1997, The Lion King: The Broadway
Musical has found a permanent home as a fixture on 42nd Street, the
heart of the theatre district on Times Square in New York. Numerous other
productions have set up in other cities around the world to showcase Julie
Taymor's revolutionary stage rendition of the original film's story.

Premium. These images are high-resolution, true 24-bit color,
and of very smooth color quality, suggesting that these images come
directly from a Disney source.

G:

Good. This refers to images whose quality is less-than-perfect
in some way-- they have moiré banding, or the coloration isn't
smooth, or just generally they aren't "P" quality. "G" images are
generally scans or laserdisc screen grabs.

F:

Fair. This rating covers everything else, ranging all the way
down to Foul (though I do try not to keep truly horrendous images on
here). Videotape screen grabs go here, as well as poorly done or low-res
scans.